BtC> Can you post an example text file with its html'ed output?
BtC> That would provide a much better first glance at what it does
BtC> without having to look through and see what the perl code does.

Good idea. I'll write something up.

The header lines were kept separate because they looked like mail
headers and I have mailmode on. The same thing applies to Bozo's
quoted text. Mailmode doesn't screw things up very often, but since
most people are usually converting non-mail, it's off by default.

Paragraphs are handled ok. In fact, this one is here just to
demonstrate that.

THIS LINE IS VERY IMPORTANT!
(Ok, it wasn't that important)

EXAMPLE HEADER

Since this is the first header noticed (all caps, underlined with an
"="), it will be a level 1 header. It gets an anchor named
"section_1".

Another example

This is the second type of header (not all caps, underlined with "=").
It gets an anchor named "section_1_1".

Yet another example

This header was in the same style, so it was assigned the same header
tag. Note the anchor names in the HTML. (You probably can't see them
in your current document view.) Its anchor is named "section_1_2".
Get the picture?

-- This is a custom header --

You can define your own custom header patterns if you know what your
documents look like.

Features of HTML::TextToHTML

Handles different kinds of lists

Bulleted

Numbered

You can nest them as far as you want.

It's pretty decent about figuring out which level of list it
is supposed to be on.

You don't need to change bullet markers to start a new list.

Lettered

Finally handles lettered lists

Upper and lower case both work

Here's an example

I've been meaning to add this for some time.

HTML without CSS can't specify how ordered lists should be
indicated, so it will be a numbered list in most browsers.

Definition lists (see below)

Doesn't screw up mail-ish things

Spots preformated text

It just needs to have enough whitespace in the line.
Surrounding blank lines aren't necessary. If it sees enough
whitespace in a line, it preformats it. How much is enough?
Set it yourself at command line if you want.

You can append a file automatically to all converted files. This
is handy for adding signatures to your documents.

Deals with paragraphs decently.

Looks for short lines in the middle of paragraphs and keeps them
short with the use of breaks (<BR>). How short the lines need to
be is configurable.

Unhyphenates split words that are in the middle of paragraphs.
Let me know if trailing punctuation isn't handled "properly".
It should be.

One can also have multi-paragraph list items, like this one.

Puts anchors at all headers and, if you're using the mail header
features, at the beginning of each mail message. The anchor names
for headings are based on guessed section numbers.

You can turn off this option too, if you don't like it.

Groks Mosaic-style "formatted text" headers (like the one below)

Can hyperlink things according to a dictionary file.
The sample dictionary handles URLs like http://www.aigeek.com/ and
<http://www.katspace.com/> and also shows how to do simpler
things such as linking the word txt2html the first time it appeared.

One can also use the link-dictionary to define custom tags, for
example using the star character to indicate italics.

Recognises and parses tables of different types:

DELIM: A table determined by delimiters.

ALIGN: No need for fancy delimiters, this figures out
a table by looking at the layout, the spacing of the cells.

BORDER: has a nice border around the table

PGSQL: the same format as Postgresql query results.

Also with XHTML! Turn on the --xhtml option and it will ensure that
all paragraphs and list items have end-tags, all tags are in
lower-case, and the doctype is for XHTML.

Example of short lines

We're the knights of the round table
We dance whene'er we're able
We do routines and chorus scenes
With footwork impeccable.
We dine well here in Camelot
We eat ham and jam and spam a lot.

Example of varied formatting

If I want to emphasize something, then I'd use stars to wrap
around the words, even if there were more than one, that's
what I'd do. But I could also underline words, so long as
the darn thing was not a_variable_name, in which case I wouldn't
want to lose the underscores in something which thought it was
underlining. Though we might want to underline more than one word
in a sentence. Especially if it is The Title Of A Book.
For another kind of emphasis, let's go and put something in bold.

But it doesn't even need to be that simple. Something which is really
exciting is coping with italics and similar things spread across
multiple lines.

Example of Long Preformatting

(extract from Let It Rain by Kristen Hall)

I have given, I have given and got none
Still I'm driven by something I can't explain
It's not a cross, it is a choice
I cannot help but hear his voice
I only wish that I could listen without shame
Let it rain, let it rain, on me
Let it rain, oh let it rain,
Let it rain, on me
I have been a witness to the perfect crime
Wipe the grin off of my face to hide the pain
It isn't worth the tears you cry
To have a perfect alibi
Now I'm beaten at the hands of my own game
Let it rain, let it rain, on me
Let it rain, oh let it rain,
Let it rain, on me

Definition Lists

A definition list comprises the following:

Term

The term part of a DL item is a word on a line by itself, ending
with a colon.

Definition

The definition part of a DL item is at least one paragraph following
the term.

If one has more than one paragraph in the definition, the first line of
the next paragraph needs to be indented two spaces from where the term
starts, otherwise we don't know that it belongs to the definition.

Examples of Tables

ALIGN

Here is a simple ALIGN table:

-e

File exists.

-z

File has zero size.

-s

File has nonzero size (returns size).

Here are some of the conditions of ALIGN tables:

Context:

A table needs to be surrounded by blank lines.

Length:

A table must contain at least two rows.

Width:

A table must contain at least two columns.

Spacing:

There needs to be at least two spaces between the columns,

otherwise there might be some random paragraph which

could have inter-word spacing that lined up by accident.

Cell Size:

If you have more than one line (as just above) then

you will simply get empty cells where the other column is empty.

Alignment:

Alignment of cells is attempted to be preserved.

BORDER

This is a table with a border.

Food

Qty

Bread

1

Milk

1

Oranges

3

Apples

6

PGSQL

This is the same table like Postgresql would make it.

Food

Qty

Bread

1

Milk

1

Oranges

3

Apples

6

(4 rows)

DELIM

A delimited table needs to have its delimiters at the start and end,
just to be sure that this is a table.

Fred

Nurk

58

George

Washington

62

Mary

Quant

35

And one can have almost any delimiter one wishes.

Darcy, Fitzwilliam

hero

Bennet, Elizabeth

heroine

Wickham, George

villain

THINGS TO DO

There are some things which this module doesn't handle yet which
I would like to implement.

I would like to be able to preserve lettered lists, that is:

recognise that they are letters and not numbers (which it already
does)

display the correct OL properties with CSS so as to preserve
that information.

The footer is everything from the end of this sentence to the
</BODY> tag.